1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:14,640 This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,945 for Friday the 15th of September 2023. 2 00:00:14,640 --> 00:00:19,120 Today's show is entitled, My Chrome Plugins. 3 00:00:19,120 --> 00:00:24,000 It is hosted by Daniel Person and is about five minutes long. 4 00:00:24,000 --> 00:00:26,640 It carries a clean flag. 5 00:00:26,640 --> 00:00:40,720 The summary is Daniel Person summarizes the essential plug-ins he uses every day. 6 00:00:40,720 --> 00:00:49,840 Hello hackers and welcome to another podcast with Daniel and I'm going to talk about a bunch 7 00:00:49,840 --> 00:00:53,600 of different subjects and I'm doing like ChatGPT. 8 00:00:53,600 --> 00:01:01,680 I'm really good at creating a bunch of words without any real knowledge behind them. 9 00:01:01,680 --> 00:01:07,520 But the topics that I'm going to talk about are pretty random and I'm going to split them up. 10 00:01:07,520 --> 00:01:14,640 Hi again, in this episode I would go through what kind of Chrome plug-ins I'm using. 11 00:01:14,640 --> 00:01:21,040 And what I think is a good Chrome plug-in, I'm what I think is not so good or something that 12 00:01:21,040 --> 00:01:23,280 you just should stay away from. 13 00:01:23,280 --> 00:01:28,960 And I have a bunch of plug-ins and some of them are essential for my work. 14 00:01:28,960 --> 00:01:34,000 First off you need some kind of password, what vault solution. 15 00:01:35,200 --> 00:01:38,240 I will not recommend anyone of them. 16 00:01:38,240 --> 00:01:41,840 I just would say that you don't use last pass. 17 00:01:41,840 --> 00:01:48,960 I used it before and I have migrated it from it and it took a lot of work to move all those passwords 18 00:01:48,960 --> 00:01:49,960 over. 19 00:01:49,960 --> 00:01:55,840 But now I have them in another password wall solution and having that as Chrome plug-in I think 20 00:01:55,840 --> 00:01:58,200 is a very good solution. 21 00:01:58,200 --> 00:02:06,400 And as I used to, YouTuber I also used the TubeBuddy plug-in, it's pretty good to do some of 22 00:02:06,480 --> 00:02:16,640 these kind of bucket or big changes if you want to go through a bunch of videos and change descriptions 23 00:02:16,640 --> 00:02:18,160 and so on. 24 00:02:18,160 --> 00:02:21,600 It has a lot of those kinds of tools in it. 25 00:02:21,600 --> 00:02:24,960 So it's not for everyone but I think it's really useful. 26 00:02:24,960 --> 00:02:31,960 Next up I have this kind of Grammally plug-in and I am a little bit dyslectic. 27 00:02:31,960 --> 00:02:35,000 I'm not a native English speaker. 28 00:02:35,080 --> 00:02:42,280 Having some Grammysheck and some help when I'm writing is also essential for my work. 29 00:02:42,280 --> 00:02:49,400 Next up I have something that is called Colour Silla and it is a tool that makes it possible 30 00:02:49,400 --> 00:02:57,000 for me to just choose any point on any web page and get the color value of that point. 31 00:02:57,000 --> 00:03:03,080 And when you are writing and creating web pages it's really nice to look around and work 32 00:03:03,160 --> 00:03:09,080 with different things and we are really quickly could get a specific color either from an image 33 00:03:09,080 --> 00:03:16,360 or from somewhere on the page in order to reuse that color in some other element. 34 00:03:16,360 --> 00:03:21,000 So it's a really good tool if you are doing web development. 35 00:03:21,000 --> 00:03:29,160 And before I also had this kind of thing for taking snapshot that was really good. 36 00:03:29,240 --> 00:03:34,120 But now that I run a bunch of that tool is actually built into a bunch of. 37 00:03:34,120 --> 00:03:39,960 I don't think that Windows has a simple good snapshot solution yet. 38 00:03:39,960 --> 00:03:48,040 They are working on it, it's getting better but the old one was worthless because you had to pretty much 39 00:03:48,040 --> 00:03:54,280 take a snapshot, put it into a document, save that document and crop and fix and so on. 40 00:03:54,280 --> 00:03:58,520 And in Ubuntu everything is built in which is really nice. 41 00:04:00,520 --> 00:04:11,320 And what do I have more? I also before had these kind of solutions to run things in browser stacks. 42 00:04:11,320 --> 00:04:18,040 So browser stack is this solution where you can go to a web page, use their plugin in order to 43 00:04:18,120 --> 00:04:26,040 log into their web page and then test your solution or your web page in a bunch of different 44 00:04:26,040 --> 00:04:32,600 web browsers. So you can test it on iOS browsers, you can test it on Android browsers, 45 00:04:32,600 --> 00:04:39,320 Mac, Windows and Linux with different kind of browsers. You have some browsers that are 46 00:04:39,320 --> 00:04:45,320 native to the Eastern Europe and you also have some that are native to the USA. 47 00:04:45,400 --> 00:04:49,640 It's really nice that you have a lot of different choices there so you can see that your 48 00:04:51,400 --> 00:04:58,520 your solutions works in all the different supported browsers. So those are the most common plugins 49 00:04:58,520 --> 00:05:05,560 that I installed in my workflow. What kind of a browser plugins do you use? I know that there are 50 00:05:05,560 --> 00:05:09,960 not that many but I think they are extremely essential for my workflow. 51 00:05:10,600 --> 00:05:20,120 You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.org. Today's show was 52 00:05:20,120 --> 00:05:26,120 contributed by a HPR listening like yourself. If you ever thought of recording podcast, 53 00:05:26,120 --> 00:05:32,680 you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it means. Hosting for HPR has been 54 00:05:32,680 --> 00:05:39,960 kindly provided by an onsthost.com, the internet archive and our synced.net. On this 55 00:05:39,960 --> 00:05:45,880 otherwise stages, today's show is released on our creative comments. Attribution for 56 00:05:45,880 --> 00:05:51,560 going to international license.